ommissioiis Given ^ight Classes 0 Cadet Of fleers . i alpl 1 !, mutely 120 cadet olfi- 3|H|ai4-ivfd on campus e.icly this to assist in the reception of ,!)(>() freshmen for ilie litCl- ^ Sbpol year. 1 ■ffielcadets, mostly unit com- and executive officers, 4Mk their oath of office and re- ^■totomn.issions from (’omnrin- and Assist- ^P^KJqmmandant Col. Frank S. ^*^™nHr. at at commanders’ con- Ita]p|,>ce Monday in the Memorial eminent Center. eakers at the conference other Hms and Vaden were Presi- Earl Rudder and Dean of Stu- lumes P. Ilannijfan. ivia said the Saturday morning q|. illation classes for freshmen 4leadership classes for sopho- •s will continue, and juniors begin a series of eight classes .!l,[) ha> Borney — ^Continued From Page 1-1) lderi » ObM lantfoo Hurricane Carla was • >, na the curtailment of search } lonor ,;itii until Sunday morning. :;, er je wreckage was found by a , nc | u h ter Sunday morning. He noti the Civil Air Patrol. Both ua { were found dead. Hon, besides being city at- , t i jMfor College Station, was a net in the Dillon and Lee law 9 ^^Hml president of the Mort- },:|jiui Title Co. His successor (>on attorney will be appointed f h . ii^e City Council. dibtM| attorney, who resided at orningside Dr., is survived vife; four sisters, Mrs. June r of Bryan, Mrs. Dora Jor- of Donna, Mrs. Anne Jeffers (UK hard son and Mrs. Lenore Ri^well of Houston; three step- at mi^^en Turner of Bryan, George •ncr of Beaumont and Lt. irner of Fort Benning, Ga.; others, Don of Bryan and >f Donna; one grandmother, riettn Farmer of Kddy- -vjBown, ami two grandchildren. , jSrfal for Dillon was held at tw ay-Jones Funeral Home lei Tuesday morning, with ^plorris House of First Meth- : - e " -■Church officiating. 'i^Ssoh, who lived at 710 Villa he jUlgi Road, is survived by his —ifrrMwo sotis, John D. and Melvin lac-" ft'., both of College Station; jdety, i daughter, Mrs. Linda Carol iiajor aly of Biloxi, Miss.; his par- laff. , Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Davison fo’ ston; five brothers, Tommy Antonio, and A. L. Jr., Lee, Joe and Kenneth, all ston; one sister, Mrs. Dana of Houston, and one grand- H ma . K Virr-fn to I intern I was held Tuesday Cllt Funeral Chapel. First Saturday drill will prob ably he Sept. 23, Davis said. He said the Corps may have a review Dec. 16. Davis said the Corps dormitories at the end of last year were in the best end-of-the-year condition they have been in for many years. Because fewer dorms were in need of repair, more were painted and acoustical tile ceilings were in stalled in many, he said. Seating in the two dining halls will be the same as last year, Davis said. For the first two weeks, freshmen will sit with sen iors, and juniors w ill sit with soph omores. Outfit first sergeants may sit with freshmen at the com mander’s discretion, he said. When sophomores are promoted to corporal (around Dec. 1), they too may sit with freshmen. Kucfder cautioned the campus leaders to take an active part in the operation of the school. “Your class may decide which direction the college will go in the next few' years. Don’t coast. Take an ac tive part in the operation of the Corps. Don’t leave everything to the juniors,’’ he said. Rudder said this applied to all seniors, “not just those with con tracts. “Every senior should take an ac tive part in the Corps. No one should be denied this opportunity simply because he does not have a contract,” Rudder said. Rudder called for “a new kind of toughness in the Corps of Ca dets. “Cadets should be tough—not from ridicule and embarrassment, but because their honor refuses to let them submit to the easy way. “Aggies are known for their pride from one end of the nation to the other. Let’s make it a pride based on honor," he said. Dean of Students James 1*. Han- nman told the commanders that the college receives no state funds for a new student who stays less than 16 days. “A freshman who leaves after a week or two repre sents a total loss to the College, monetarily as well as academic ally.” Hannigan congratulated the as sembled cadets on the new honor code formulated over the summer. “The honor code is nothing new. A&M had a formal written honor code until World War II. It was discontinued during the war and the unwritten code—an Aggie doesn’t lie, cheat or steal, nor does he tolerate those who do—took its place.” Hannigan said several areas in the school, including the School of Veterinary Medicine, already have honor codes. mg f * rs, ie- stand- ect d id to red i* i n ice, ratio# policti heft* when tire ion. ■ —aw ■—awoBa—i.., I a SHOES fOR MEN $21.00 Genuine Cordovan TBae Breathes* of The bool makers of old worked with top quality leather like this to make shoes for their kings. Jarman’s skilled craftsmen use genuine Cordovan to create this i modern triumph in shoemaking. For handsome styling and sure-footed comfort slop by today and try a pair. 'he Exchange Store “Serving Texas Aggies” On Instrument Drawing Set Night classes on how to make instrument drawings and how to read engineering drawings, will be held at A&M this fall. The classes will be conducted by the Depart ment of Engineering Graphics. Prospective applicants over 21 years of ag<£ who have not recent ly attended school and who cannot satisfy the college entrance re quirements in full, w'ill be admitted without examination by individual approval, the announcement ad dressed primarily to residents of the Bryan-College Station area, points out. College credit of two semester hours will be awarded upon satisfactory completion of the course. One group will meet Monday and Thursday evenings and a sec ond group will meet Tuesday and Friday evenings. Time will be from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. All applicants for registration have been urged to contact the Registrar’s Office, prior to Sept. 15-6. Additional information may be obtained from the Department of Engineering Graphics. REGISTRATION (Continued From Page 1-1) religious life and general secre tary of the YMCA, presided at the week’s second general assem bly Wednesday night in G. Rollie White Coliseum. James N. Crouch of Gladewater, president of the Student YMCA Cabinet, delivered the principal ad dress on “The Place of Religion at Aggieland.” Following Crouch’s talk, minis ters of College Station churches were introduced to the freshmen. They, in turn, invited the frosh to open house activities held in most of the churches that same night. At registration proceedings this afternoon and tomorrow morning, photos for identification cards are being made before the students file into Sbisa Hall to register. This afternoon freshmen in the following units were registered: Maroon and White Bands, Com panies H-3, G-3, E-3, F-3, C-3, F-2, C-2, B-2, B-3 and D-3; Squad rons 16, 15, 8, 5, 14, 10, 6 and 4, and all civilian freshmen. Freshmen, in these units will register in the morning: Companies D-2, A-2, E-2, A-3, G-2, C-l, A-l, G-l, D-l, F-l, B-l and E-l, and Squadrons 2, 3, 13, 11, T, 9, 1 and 13. After registration is completed Friday at noon, general assemblies are scheduled Friday afternoon and Saturday morning, then the freshmen will be free until classes begin Monday morning. Friday afternoon Dean of Stu dents James P. Hannigan will pre side at a 1:15 p.m. assembly in White Coliseum. Following this meeting, all frosh cadets will re main fot a meeting with Com- bandant Col. Joe E. Davis and ci vilian freshmen will trek to the Assembly Room of the Memorial Student Center for a meeting with Bennie A. Zinn, director of student affairs. The Saturday morning meeting in White Coliseum, at 8, will be for cadets only. Col. Davis, Cadet Col. of the Corps Bill Cardwell and several other cadet officers will address the group. The freshmen will be released at 10 a.m. for orientation meetings with their respective commanding officers. METERED MATRIMONY KANKAKEE, 111. (A 5 ) —Matri mony oft times is taken likely, but Policeman Virfgil Jordan thinks one woman has carried it too far. Jordan, a parking meter officer, reported that a meter he was re pairing had a woman’s wedding band in the coin slot in lieu of a coin. THE Thursday, September 14, 19G1 BATTALION College Station, Texas Page 5 MILITARY (Continued From Page 1-1) their “academic substitute”, which for all freshmen will be English 103. Sophomores will continue to take two contact hours of mili tary science a week, as in the past. There will be no “academic sub stitute” for them. Juniors* and seniors will take three contact hours of military science this fall (instead of four) and two contact hours this spring (instead of four). They will take their “academic substitute” either in the spring or in the fall. Both the “substitute” and the semester it is taken will depend on the maj or subject of the cadet. In most cases, the “substitute” will be re quired for the major anyway. The new program equalizes the number of hours Army and Air Force ROTC cadets spend in mili tary classes. The Department of Air Sciences has been following a program for several years similar to the new Army set up. Air Force ROTC freshmen and sophomores have been following practically the same program as the Army, but there the similarity has ended. Air Force contract juniors take only one contact hour of air science the first semester. But they must take English 210, a two credit hour logic and reasoning course, and either English 401 or English 403, both public speaking courses. (English 401 is a one- hour course while 403 is a two- hour course. The option is ’given because English 403 is required for several degrees anyway. ) Second semester Air Force jun iors now take no “outside” cours es, but spend five contact hours a week in air science classes. Seniors in the Air Force pro gram spend one hour a week in military classes, and are required to take two liberal arts courses in addition to their air science training. The two courses, taken in any order, are History 318, a three- hour course dealing with interna tional developments since 1918, and Geography 401, a three-hour course in international political geography. This year, to further conform with the Army’s new program, Air Force ROTC freshmen will bo required to take only one contact hour of air science a week (in addition to Saturday drill), thus spending the same amount of time in military science classes as their Army ROTC buddies. 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